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Second part of Edward Snowden interview repeats accusation that Apple, other tech companies grant the NSA access to private data

Second part of Edward Snowden interview repeats accusation that Apple, other tech companies grant the NSA access to private data

Apple, along with Google, Microsoft, and Facebook, has once again been accused of granting the U.S. government, and the NSA in particular, access to private user data. In the second part of an interview originally conducted back in June, but only posted today, Edward Snowden tells The Guardian:

Beyond that we've got PRISM which is a demonstration of how the US Government co-opts US corporate power to its own end. Companies like Google, Facebook, Apple and Microsoft, they all get together with the NSA and provide the NSA direct access to the back ends of all of the systems that we use to communicate, to store data, to put things in the cloud. And even just to send birthday wishes and keep a record of your life. And they give NSA direct access that they don't need to oversee so they can't be held liable for it.

Previously, to address the issue, a "commitment to customer privacy" was posted by Apple which said in part:

We do not provide any government agency with direct access to our servers, and any government agency requesting customer content must get a court order.

We can choose to believe the accusations, or the denials, but it points to a far larger issue: the need the believe. Where there's no transparency, there's no real trust. Unfortunately, with not only the U.S. and other governments implicated in massive, unprecedented, horrific surveillance, along with pretty much every major technology platform owner and communications companies there's no one and nothing that can be trusted.

You can't switch phones. You can't switch networks. You can't switch countries. You can apply better security on your own end, put PGP on your email and use onion routers for your internet traffic, but when data is stored our privacy isn't only violated now, but into the future, where decryption technology might chew through in milliseconds what it takes months to chew through today.

It also removes the illusion of being a needle in the haystack, because long-term storage means nothing can be lost to the stream, it's always and only just a query away. It's the microphones we speak into while walking down the street, and the cameras we may or may not know are even on in our bedrooms. It's the transition from an expectation of privacy to an expectation of no privacy. It's a violation so deep, and so enormous, the mind recoils from it. It's the loss of innocence, the type that occurs after any human-engineered disaster, only far more subversive because it exists in bits and not atoms. We can't see the loss, and we can't appreciate the repercussions. And we can no longer answer this seemingly simple question: Who can we trust?

Apple has used the privacy card to compete against the likes of Google and Facebook in the past. Why not use it to compete for us now? Make our data as difficult as possible to collect and access, from adding super-easy PGP to Mail.app and encrypting iMessage, FaceTime, and other communications in a way that's not only secure, but openly, verifiably secure?

It may well be impossible to stop the widespread accumulation of raw bits, but there's nobility in the attempt, and where goes Apple, so often do others follow.

Source: The Guardian

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/i59NNqlgT6k/story01.htm

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